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The
Musician's Corner: Radio & Records
By Tom Leu, MusicDish.com
I
recently attended a music conference in Nashville where I gained
some interesting insights about the radio and record business relationship.
How do radio stations decide what artists and singles to play? Unless
you're getting regular airplay on stations across the country, you
might want to read on.
Record
companies have to lobby to get their artists played on radio stations
from every format. There are radio and promotions personnel at record
companies whose job is to visit radio stations in their territories
and push their latest releases to the program and music directors.
Radio trackers are usually independents that do essentially the
same thing. Airplay usually equals record sales, and enough record
sales equal profits for the labels. The labels literally take out
want ads in the radio trade magazines to create interest for their
artists. These ads are basically snapshot resumes for the latest
singles the labels are pushing to radio. The ads contain what chart
the song is targeting, Soundscan sales numbers, last week's
charting position, movement, number of plays, and the stations the
song is being played on.
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And what
do the radio stations get for their "generosity" by playing these
songs? They attract large quantities of listeners tuning in to hear
the latest and greatest artists and songs. These listeners are of
course, consumers for the radio station's advertisers. These advertisers
will continue to pay the radio station premiums for airtime as long
as the station continues to pull a large listening audience. This
is the way of the business world and the music business is no exception.
This
process is more complex than it first appears however. There is
more music out there than there are radio stations and airtime to
play the music. This scarcity of programming slots creates intense
competition and high stakes for record companies, artists, and radio
stations. Which single and whose single to play becomes a science
of history lessons. What is working and what has been working recently
becomes the modus operandi of the day.
The
twelve main radio chart categories are: CHR/Pop (contemporary hit
radio), CHR/Rhythmic, AC (adult contemporary), Hot AC, Rock, Active
Rock, Alternative, Urban, Urban AC, Country, Triple A, and Smooth
Jazz. Recent revenue increases and growth in the Christian music
genre may find this chart added to the "mainstream" yet.
If
you happen to be one of those artists who claim to care less about
radio airplay or fitting into a certain format, disregard this entire
column and please send a copy of this to someone interested in learning
something about this often misunderstood industry. Whether we like
it or not, radio does affect consumer buying decisions. This should
matter to all artists regardless of our genre or aspirations for
airplay.
The
Bottom Line: Research how the radio business operates and understand
the different formats that are charted. Many musicians and artists
are in the dark about how radio works and it shows in their approach.
Understand the charts to figure out where your music may fit. Study
what's getting played and where it's getting played. Look at how
many spins per week the various charts are reporting from their
reporting stations. Check out www.rronline.com
to get an inside look at this medium that helps make and break upstart
as well as veteran artists. Do this before you call up your local
Program Director griping because they're not playing your CD.
Provided
by the MusicDish
Network. Copyright © Tag
It 2003 - Republished with Permission

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